2010_10_19

Page 1

The

S TUDENT P RINTZ www.studentprintz.com

SERVING SOUTHERN MISS SINCE 1927

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

GRASS MASS ON THE

Volume 95 Issue 16

ON CAMPUS

EAGLEPALOOZA LINEUP REVEALED

Printz Writer

KID WHO’S THE

YCLE? ON THE UNIC

See page 6

RECAP

Courtesy of SGA

We the Kings announced as headliner Earvin Hopkins Printz Writer

See page 8 TODAY

89/57 TOMORROW

85/50 INDEX Calendar ...................... 2 Sudoku ................. 2 News ............................ 3 Feature ......................... 5 Arts & Entertainment ..... 7 Sports ......................... 8

Pro-life amendment may be aborted Ashton Pittman

See page 3

FOOTBALL

LOCAL

The Student Government Association announced the Eaglepalooza lineup Monday at the reveal party at the Powerhouse. We the Kings will be this year’s headlining band. John Barr, junior sociology major, was in charge of sponsorship for Eagleplaooza. He said he was excited to reveal this year’s band. “I am very pumped and excited about the choice we made,” Barr said. “They aren’t the biggest name, but they have a great following, voice and style. They cater to a large audience.” The entire lineup is as follows: Matthew Funches, Banner Fair, Lindsey Lee, Speakerboxx and We the Kings. Barr also gave details on the work it took to put this together. “It was kind of hard getting the bands together,” Barr said. “We have to figure out what image we want – style, genre; and then we have to work with price and availability. It was hard picking the perfect combination that would

Courtesy of SGA

work for Eaglepalooza, but I am happy with the choice we made.” Student Government Association President Kasey Mitchell talked about the reveal party. “I am very excited about Eaglepalooza this year, and I think the students were happy with the lineup,” Mitchell said. “The directors have worked very hard in obtaining sponsorship and being very creative with how the money was spent. We were able to secure five different bands for the night, so the lineup is long, and there was a lot of vari-

ety so hopefully there was a group there for everyone, despite their musical preferences.” Engitshun Magee, a senior at USM, was excited about lineup of musicians they had. “This is my first time coming to the reveal party,” Magee said. “I love the artists they had. I enjoyed myself, and I am looking forward in seeing the band We The Kings perform.” Eaglepalooza will take place downtown at the intersection of Pine Street and Main Street at 5:30 p.m. Nov. 19.

The fate of a voter initiative that could bring an end to abortion in Mississippi hinges on the mercy of a judge in Hinds County, Miss. On Oct. 7, Hinds County Circuit Judge Malcolm Harrison heard arguments on Initiative 26, also known as the Mississippi Personhood Amendment. The amendment seeks to define the term “person” as meaning “every human being from the moment of fertilization, cloning or the functional equivalent thereof.” By extending the definition of “person” to include the earliest forms of human life, proponents could succeed in legally equating even the earliest abortions with the killing of a fully developed human being. Cal Zastrow, co-founder of Personhood USA, the national branch of a movement to implement similar measures nationwide, said the amendment could take effect in spite of past court decisions that affirmed a right to abortion. Specifically, he said it would ignore, not overturn, Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that declared abortion to be a constitutionally protected right. After gathering over 130,000 signatures, supporters had hoped the measure would be on the November 2011 statewide ballot. However, the amendment could be stopped in its tracks pending Harrison’s ruling, which he is expected to deliver soon. The hearing centered around arguments brought by plaintiffs Cristen Hemmins and Deborah Hughes, both of Oxford, Miss., asserting that the initiative does not meet the requirements to be put up for a vote. Alexa Kolbi-Molinas of the American Civil Liberties Union, an attorney representing Hemmins and Hughes, said the initiative is unconstitutional because it violates a key requirement for ballot initiatives as laid out in the Mississippi Constitution.

See PERSONHOOD, 3


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